The deal will provide connectivity to 500 schools, corporate and remote office sites.

The network will underpin the council’s estate rationalisation programme, which is expected to see the number of council offices reduce by two-thirds to 30 properties as the network will extend to home-based workers.

Fife's head of ICT, Charlie Anderson, said the immediate rationale for the project was as a cost-saving exercise.

The contract will replace the entire wide area network (WAN) for schools and councils. It will simplify the network and allow for the acceleration of cloud services, he said.

Fife is also undergoing a number of IT overhauls.

“We are looking at a replacement of core financial systems and also converting from software provider Novell to Microsoft. We deployed a number of large programmes, IP telephony and unified printing. But every time we were integrating to Novell it was difficult.

“The Microsoft technology stack fitted with us for mobile working and collaborative and conference solutions, so tied in well with the way the council is looking to work,” said Anderson.

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